Featured Robotics Videos

Gun-wielding robots are only ever seen in action films, until now. Suidobashi Heavy Industry, A Japanese electronics company in Tokyo, have revealed a $1.2 million gun-wielding robot manipulated using smartphone technology. This robot is powered by diesel, is four meters in height, weighs 4.5 tonnes and can move at 10 km/h.

The Nao Devils Dortmund are a RoboCup team by the Robotics Research Institute of TU Dortmund University participating in the Standard Platform League as the successor of team BreDoBrothers, which was a cooperation of the University of Bremen and the TU Dortmund University.

The Swumanoid project has be developed by the Nakashima Group at Tokyo Institute of Technology. It is hoped that the Swumanoid will help understand how humans can swim at a faster pace and to make this technology a good tool for helping athletes enhance their speed at swimming.

Dr. Florain ‘Floyd’ Mueller at the Exertion Games Lab RMIT University is currently developing the Joggobot, a flying robot that will work to interact with the human body, play (i.e., sports exercise), and technology.

In the current iteration of Robonaut, Robonaut 2 or R2, NASA and General Motors are working together with assistance from Oceaneering Space Systems engineers to accelerate development of the next generation of robots and related technologies for use in the automotive and aerospace industries.

At Celera Motion, we take our components and develop mechatronic assemblies - creating robot joints with extreme accuracy, low profiles, and high torque to deliver a unique solution for your requirements.

Cartesian or Gantry robots used in automated manufacturing, inspection, and medical imaging must consistently and repeatedly measure, position, or manipulate components - or scan across an area at a constant velocity to reliably complete the task at hand.

ASIMO is a humanoid robot created by Honda. Standing at 130 centimeters (4 feet 3 inches) and weighing 54 kilograms (119 pounds), the robot resembles a small astronaut wearing a backpack and can walk or run on two feet at speeds up to 6 km/h (3.7 mph), matching Hitachi's EMIEW.

The Infinity Series are Low-Profile DDR Motors for Arc Segment and Large Diameter Motion. They enable OEMs to move light payloads in smooth and accurate arc-shaped and full 360-degree rotary motion profiles.